If you’ve been collecting symptoms that never quite add up to one tidy diagnosis — brain fog, 3am wake-ups, bloating, itchy skin, crashes after coffee — you’re not imagining it. Scattered symptoms often share a hidden root, and the trick is to look at the whole cluster at once instead of chasing each one alone.
That’s what the Symptom Pattern Matcher does. Check everything that sounds like you, and it builds a Root Cause Probability Map — showing which patterns your cluster most resembles (heavy metals, mold, histamine, blood sugar, adrenal stress, mineral depletion, nervous-system dysregulation, or gut) and where to start exploring.
Mold and mycotoxin work is brutal when it's actually mold and frustrating when it isn't. The same brain fog, fatigue, and inflammation show up across all four toxic load types, which is why so many people spend months on the wrong protocol before that becomes obvious. The 2-minute What's Draining Your Brain Tool helps confirm or rule out mold as your dominant load before you commit to the next phase of work.
Which Hidden Root Cause Fits Your Symptoms?
Check every symptom you have — the more you check, the clearer the pattern. You’ll get a Root Cause Probability Map showing which patterns your cluster most resembles, and where to start.
Your Root Cause Probability Map
This is an educational pattern-matching tool, not a diagnosis. Symptoms overlap across many causes. Use it to decide what to explore and discuss with a qualified clinician — especially for new, severe, or persistent symptoms.
↻ Start overHow to read your map
The longer the bar, the more your checked symptoms overlap with that pattern. Most people light up two or three — that’s normal, because these patterns feed each other (an overloaded gut drives histamine; blood-sugar swings stress the adrenals). Start with your top bar, explore the suggested next step, and let the 90-second Toxic Load Assessment help you find the single biggest driver underneath it all.
Most patterns trace back to one thing
What this tool is — and isn’t
This is an educational pattern-matching tool to help you decide what’s worth exploring and discussing with a qualified clinician. It is not a diagnosis, and symptoms overlap across many causes — including ones that need medical care. See a professional for any new, severe, one-sided, or persistent symptom rather than self-treating from a bar chart.
Educational only; not medical advice. If a symptom is new, severe, or worsening, see a clinician.

